|
Trends and Buzz
How to bamboozle a gringoPosted by Jeremy Goldkorn, November 16, 2005 9:31 PM
![]() Open daily The Governator is in Beijing to lobby for Californian business interests, and he has brought along retinue of executives who hope to ride his coat tails to success in China, which let's not forget, has a population of 1.3 billion people. Have a look at this excerpt from a report in The San Francisco Chronicle called 'Members of Schwarzenegger's delegation paid thousands': Beijing -- They are the chief executives of Fortune 500 companies, the leaders of big energy firms and major retailers -- and they are farmers and folks who have created their own small family-run businesses. Now let's not dwell on the fact that these people paid good money to hear the kind of mind-numbing speeches that are aired every day on CCTV 9, but simply consider the phrase 'normally inaccessible historic places such as the Great Hall of the People': The phone number of the Great Hall of the People is (+8610) 6309 6156. It is open almost every day between 8:30 am and 3 pm for tourist visits, and parts of it are available for rental for events. Good luck signing the contracts and selling to the 1.3 billion consumers out there fellas! Links and Sources
|
Jobs in China
Recent Comments
David Ever on
CCTV underpants and hemorrhoids in the Shanghai press
banyue on
Linda Jaivin on Sexy Beijing
David D on
Subway trains to shelter Sichuan homeless
xiaowang on
Blogger Conference interviews: Ping Ke
Danwei.TV
Danwei Model Workers
![]() Recommended blogs and new media
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Books on China
A brief history of Shanghai's future: An essay by Jeffrey Wasserstrom, author of Global Shanghai, 1850-2010.
Carl Crow's 400 Million Customers: An excerpt from Carl Crow's classic 400 Million Customers and an introduction by Paul French.
Tom Carter: Portrait of a People: Tom Carter is a photographer who spent two years backpacking around China, taking photographs of people in every province. The result is a book called China: Portrait of a People, recently published by Blacksmith Books.
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ How much money does a Beijing lawyer make? (2005.06): Today's edition of the Legal Mirror (法制晚报) featured a new financial column called 'Checking Your Pockets' (钱包大兜底). The aim of the column is to inform the readers about how much money people in selected industries make in Beijing. To pay respect to its name, Legal Mirror kicked off with lawyers. Here are the results of the report: + Paper tigers, whispering sweet nothings into each other's ears (2008.02): An article originally published in 1999 by Geremie Barmé about newspapers in China and how they have changed since the Cultural Revolution. + SARFT uncovers a poisoned apple (2007.03): Chang Ping (长平) on SARFT's criticism of Lost in Beijing (苹果 aka Apple), Still Life (三峡好人), and Thirteen Princess Trees (十三棵泡桐).
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky
or Feedburner |



